Word Meanings - INSIPID - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. Wanting in the qualities which affect the organs of taste; without taste or savor; vapid; tasteless; as, insipid drink or food. Boyle. 2. Wanting in spirit, life, or animation; uninteresting; weak; vapid; flat; dull; heavy; as, an insipid woman;
Additional info about word: INSIPID
1. Wanting in the qualities which affect the organs of taste; without taste or savor; vapid; tasteless; as, insipid drink or food. Boyle. 2. Wanting in spirit, life, or animation; uninteresting; weak; vapid; flat; dull; heavy; as, an insipid woman; an insipid composition. Flat, insipid, and ridiculous stuff to him. South. But his wit is faint, and his salt, if I may dare to say so, almost insipid. Dryden. Syn. -- Tasteless; vapid; dull; spiritless; unanimated; lifeless; flat; stale; pointless; uninteresting.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of INSIPID)
- Flat
- Dull
- tame
- insipid
- vapid
- spiritless
- level
- horizontal
- absolute
- even
- downright
- mawkish
- tasteless
- lifeless
- Mawkish
- Sickly
- sentimental
- maudlin
- loathsome
- nauseous
- flat
- Vapid
- dull
- flavorless
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of INSIPID)
Related words: (words related to INSIPID)
- LIFELESS
Destitute of life, or deprived of life; not containing, or inhabited by, living beings or vegetation; dead, or apparently dead; spiritless; powerless; dull; as, a lifeless carcass; lifeless matter; a lifeless desert; a lifeless wine; a lifeless - MAWKISHLY
In a mawkish way. - HORIZONTALLY
In a horizontal direction or position; on a level; as, moving horizontally. - ABSOLUTENESS
The quality of being absolute; independence of everything extraneous; unlimitedness; absolute power; independent reality; positiveness. - LEVELER
1. One who, or that which, levels. 2. One who would remove social inequalities or distinctions; a socialist. - SENTIMENTALLY
In a sentimental manner. - LEVEL
libella level, water level, a plumb level, dim. of libra pound, measure for liquids, balance, water poise, level. Cf. Librate, 1. A line or surface to which, at every point, a vertical or plumb line is perpendicular; a line or surface which is - MAWKISHNESS
The quality or state of being mawkish. J. H. Newman. - FLAVORLESS
Without flavor; tasteless. - NAUSEOUS
Causing, or fitted to cause, nausea; sickening; loathsome; disgusting; exciting abhorrence; as, a nauseous drug or medicine. -- Nau"seous*ly, adv. -- Nau"seous*ness, n. The nauseousness of such company disgusts a reasonable man. Dryden. - GRADUATED
Tapered; -- said of a bird's tail when the outer feathers are shortest, and the others successively longer. Graduated tube, bottle, cap, or glass, a vessel, usually of glass, having horizontal marks upon its sides, with figures, to indicate the - MAUDLINWORT
The oxeye daisy. - HORIZONTAL
1. Pertaining to, or near, the horizon. "Horizontal misty air." Milton. 2. Parallel to the horizon; on a level; as, a horizontalline or surface. 3. Measured or contained in a plane of the horizon; as, horizontal distance. Horizontal drill, - SENTIMENTALIST
One who has, or affects, sentiment or fine feeling. - VAPID
Having lost its life and spirit; dead; spiritless; insipid; flat; dull; unanimated; as, vapid beer; a vapid speech; a vapid state of the blood. A cheap, bloodless reformation, a guiltless liberty, appear flat and vapid to their taste. Burke. -- - MAWKISH
1. Apt to cause satiety or loathing; nauseous; disgusting. So sweetly mawkish', and so smoothly dull. Pope. 2. Easily disgusted; squeamish; sentimentally fastidious. J. H. Newman. - INSIPIDLY
In an insipid manner; without taste, life, or spirit; flatly. Locke. Sharp. - FURROWY
Furrowed. Tennyson. - INSIPIDITY; INSIPIDNESS
The quality or state of being insipid; vapidity. "Dryden's lines shine strongly through the insipidity of Tate's." Pope. - HORIZONTALITY
The state or quality of being horizontal. Kirwan. - SEA LEVEL
The level of the surface of the sea; any surface on the same level with the sea. - UNDERFURROW
To cover as under a furrow; to plow in; as, to underfurrow seed or manure. - WATER LEVEL
1. The level formed by the surface of still water. 2. A kind of leveling instrument. See under Level, n. - WATER-FURROW
To make water furrows in.